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In this episode Pastor Mackenzie Matthews interviews John and Mary Dubler about how God met them and called them each to each other and into ministry. John and Mary’s journey to marry came after the loss of John’s first wife Lois, and in this episode they share the journey of integrating their lives and stepping into ministry together. They also share about their season of leading a church coming to an end and how they came to integrate into the Timberline Church community. God has been generous to them and their kindness and faithfulness is abundantly evident in their lives. Resources from this episode: John and Mary Dubler’s Youtube Channel Groups at Timberline Church
Dublerów wybrano do Trybunału Konstytucyjnego uchwałami, więc także uchwałami trzeba ten błąd naprawić Uchwały Sejmu, który wybrał do TK sędziów na zajęte miejsca, zapadły na początku kadencji z 2015 r., dlatego nowy Sejm już na pierwszym posiedzeniu może przyjąć uchwały, które pozbawią mocy prawnej tamte uchwały „dublerskie”. To lepsze rozwiązanie niż ustawa. To wykonanie wyroków TK z 2015 roku oraz orzeczenia Europejskiego Trybunału Praw Człowieka, który w sprawie Xero Flor uznał, że Mariusz Muszyński nie jest sędzią. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Michael Benchabat, fondateur du réseau de conseillers immobiliers MeileursBiens est l'invité de Mon Podcast Immo. Au micro d'Ariane Artinian, il présente les spéficités de son enseigne qui verse 100% des honotaires au mandataire et revient sur les chiffres qui lui ont permis de figurer dans le top 10 du classement des champions de la croissance établi par Les Echos, tout secteur confondu. Son objectif ? Dubler le nombre de conseillers immobiliers. Cet épisode a été enregistré en live du Forum des Métiers de l'Immobilier et de la Ville (Fmiv)
Mikail Atiyeh speaks with Douglas Dubler, one of the most talented and innovative photographers in the industry. With a career spanning several decades, Douglas has established himself as a master of fashion and beauty photography and has worked with major motion picture studios, cosmetic companies, and commercial clients. His unique techniques and creative approach to photography have earned him recognition and numerous awards from the industry. Listen to #Pulse95Radio in the UAE by tuning in on your radio (95.00 FM) or online on our website: www.pulse95radio.com ************************ Follow us on Social. www.facebook.com/pulse95radio www.twitter.com/pulse95radio www.instagram.com/pulse95radio
Jules Jenssen is a drummer, music producer, singer-songwriter, and Ableton Live playback engineer. In the past decade, Jules performed over 1000 nationwide gigs with numerous artists, produced a multi-year music festival, obtained song placements in video games (NBA 2k Playgrounds), created a radio/podcast piece with Jay Allison's transom.org, among other creative endeavors. Jules also worked with Electronic Creatives, a team of playback engineers working alongside Platinum & Grammy artists from studio to stage founded by Laura Escude. He managed the entire Transmute educational program created by Laura, helping artists build their advanced live performance rigs using Ableton Live. Follow Jules Below: Instagram @JulesJenssen Linktr.ee/JulesJenssen Youtube.com/julesjenssen Episode Sponsored by Vochlea: Dubler 2 transforms your voice into a real-time MIDI controller, allowing you to write music at the speed of thought. If you can sing it, beatbox it, hum it, or whistle it— now you can play it. Dubler works with all DAWs and you have the option to purchase The Dubler Studio Kit 2 which provides everything you need to vocally translate your musical ideas into reality, in one box. The kit comes with Dubler 2 software, a custom USB microphone, and alternatively you can purchase the software only version of Dubler 2 and you can calibrate your preferred microphone. Click Here To Learn More on Vochlea.com Save 10% with the code: liveproducersonline Join the newsletter: liveproducersonline.com/newsletter Join Discord: discord.gg/ceb9CgAFFj
Chuck Sutton is a producer, singer-songwriter, performer, and Ableton Live educator. He's developed sponsored video tutorials with companies like Ableton, Antares, XLN Audio, and iZotope. In 2019, his debut album released and reached over 6 million streams, with his single “All or Nothin” premiering on HBO's show Insecure. Chuck is also known for recreating the popular Teenage Engineering's OP-1 synth using Ableton Live devices, and participated in Andrew Huang's 4 Producers Flip the Same Sample series. Follow Chuck Sutton below: Instagram: @chuck_sutton Twitter: @chuck_suttonn Episode Sponsored by Vochlea: Dubler 2 transforms your voice into a real-time MIDI controller, allowing you to write music at the speed of thought. If you can sing it, beatbox it, hum it, or whistle it— now you can play it. Dubler works with all DAWs and you have the option to purchase The Dubler Studio Kit 2 which provides everything you need to vocally translate your musical ideas into reality, in one box. The kit comes with Dubler 2 software, a custom USB microphone, and alternatively you can purchase the software only version of Dubler 2 and you can calibrate your preferred microphone. Click Here To Learn More on Vochlea.com Save 10% with the code: liveproducersonline Join the podcast newsletter: liveproducersonline.com/newsletter
Pat & Satts chat with Olympian Cedric Dubler about his efforts in the decathlon including inspiring the nation by encouraging his teammate Ash Maloney towards the bronze medal
He's become the hero of the Tokyo Games - sacrificing a race of his own to help a teammate win a medal. Cedric Dubler talks to us from Hotel Quarantine... Follow Ash, Kip & Luttsy with Susie O'Neill! Facebook: www.facebook.com/ashkipluttsyandsusieoneill Twitter: www.twitter.com/AKLS_nova Instagram: www.instagram.com/ashkipluttsyandsusie See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Olympics are finished - but we're not finished talking about them. All good things must come to an end, but we're not finished talking about our amazing Aussies. PLUS there is a BIG announcement at the end of this (BIG) episode as the boys announce their new interview series... #TokyoHangover See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of Assembly, Zac and Amaryah discuss prison abolition and religion with Joshua Dubler and Vincent Lloyd, authors of the recent book "Break Every Yoke:Religion, Justice, and the Abolition of Prisons." Among other things, they discuss what to do now that prison abolition has drawn greater attention from mainstream media and religion's role in prison abolitionism.
In this episode of Assembly, Zac and Amaryah discuss prison abolition and religion with Joshua Dubler and Vincent Lloyd, authors of the recent book "Break Every Yoke:Religion, Justice, and the Abolition of Prisons." Among other things, they discuss what to do now that prison abolition has drawn greater attention from mainstream media and religion's role in prison abolitionism.
Hey Besties!! This week I bring you a long episode full of juicy facts about wine. I sat down with a professional sommelier (and awesome friend!) to help us all take our wine drinking to the next level. We discuss how to branch out from your Moscato rut, his favorite bottles under $20, and how to know good wine from bad wine. (Hint, it's not what I expected!) He's also a professional chef, so there is some foodie talk in there as well. Something for everyone! Give it a listen and let's plan our next wine tasting together! Be sure to join the conversations over on Facebook or Instagram! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kayleigh-robinson/message
Es ist passiert! Der heilige Memelord aus dem hohen Norden hat uns mit einer Audienz gesegnet lässt mit uns das Jahr nochmals Revue passieren. Während die einen das Trainwreck 2020 so schnell wie möglich abhaken möchten, geben wir uns nochmals die ganze Härte im grande 101-Silvesterstadl. Wohnzimmer-Konzerte von J.P. Love, fragwürdige TV-Romanzen, Dubler, Mimi Jäger, und andere Dödel, Elon Aeschlimann Musk, Räubergeschichten aus der Rathausgasse, Rudi Giulianis Blähungen, Unzucht in Thermalbädern... Da war doch einiges los, das besprochen werden muss. Cheers, Bitches und auf ein Neues! 2020 persönlich: 05:13 Januar: 10:57 Februar: 19:24 März: 30:36 April: 45:02 Mai: 1:00:00 Juni: 1:07:13 Juli: 1:16:47 August: 1:21:10 September: 1:26:48 Oktober: 1:33:46 November: 1:40:09 Dezember: 1:49:55 Whack des Jahres: 2:02:08 Crack des Jahres: 2:05:03 Banger des Jahres: 2:09:30 Instagram: @zimmer.101 | Playlist: 101 Banger
John Bigelow Taylor and Dianne Dubler from Kubaba Books stopped by to hang, and they had the most incredible stories to share. They talked about inspiration, photography, home, jewelry, book creation, and even true crime! Check out John & Dianne online: Website- http://www.kubaba.com/ Their book on Amazon- Stardust: The Work and Life of Jewel Extraordinaire Frédéric Zaavy - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Love our show? Support us by becoming a Craft Hangout patron on Patreon! https://patreon.com/crafthangout ------------------------------------------------ Our snazzy theme song is by Scott Making Cents: https://m.soundcloud.com/scottmakingcents ------------------------------------------------ Oh! And don’t forget to join our tribe! www.crafthangout.com www.instagram.com/crafthangout https://www.facebook.com/crafthangout
Nils Braun-Dubler ist geschäftsführender Partner des Instituts für Wirtschaftsstudien Basel. Er spricht anlässlich eines Vortrages im Coworking-Space LASPACE über die Chancen und Gefahren der Blockchain-Technologie. Blockchain: Revolution oder heisse Luft? Oft wird der Blockchain-Technologie das Potential nachgesagt, verschiedenste Bereiche der Gesellschaft zu revolutionieren. Blockchain-Projekte schiessen wie Pilze aus dem Boden und das Parlament hat diesen Herbst zwei Gesetzesanpassungen vorgenommen, um mehr Rechtssicherheit zu schaffen. Währenddessen monieren Skeptiker, dass hinter den meisten Projekten nichts als heisse Luft steckt. Kritisiert werden unter anderem der enorm hohe Energieverbrauch und der Missbrauch für kriminelle Zwecke. Links: Institut für Wirtschaftsstudien Basel: https://www.iwsb.ch/ Marketing Hero: https://marketing-hero.ch Instagram Marketing Hero: https://www.instagram.com/marketing_hero_podcast/ Instagram Maximilian von Arx: https://www.instagram.com/maximilian_von_arx
Raus mit dem Content solange er noch lauwarm ist! Ab sofort gibt's Zimmer 101 pünktlich jeden Samstag, ein bisschen up-to-dater als bisher. In Folge 2 sind wir putzhässig. Pendler gehen auf die Eierstöcke, dämliche Kindernamen auch, dass Belästigung zum Alltag gehört sowieso und das Gespann Jäger/Dubler.... AARRGGH! Was uns weniger auf die Palme gebracht und eher belustigt hat: Vom vermeintlichen Herr Berset gestalkt werden und People Watching vor dem Eidgenoss. Übrigens: Wir sind jetzt auch ein Trinkspiel #banger | Instagram: @zimmer.101 | Playlist: 101 Banger
Laura Dubler and Will Holmes are a couple who run a small personal training facility called Core Training in Switzerland. Switzerland announced that gyms could be opened from early May, so they've had 6+ weeks worth of reopening experience now. I asked them to come on talk about what they've learnt during that time. We cover whether or not they've kept their online offering, how their clients have found coming back into the gym, how they've found coaching while social distancing and a bunch of unexpected things that will help you plan for your gym reopening. Timestamps: [02.45] - How Laura and Will ended up opening a gym in Switzerland [05.58] - How their business model works [09.43] - How they have found reopening their gym since lockdown has been lifted in Switzerland [11.55] - Did they keep their online offering alongside reopening their gym? [16.25] - How many of their members came straight back in as they announced their gym was back open? [17.25] - Have they had any clients who have learnt they've got COVID as they reopened? [19.55] - How they plan to handle things if a client announces they have COVID and were in the gym yesterday? [24.03] - What rules they have around wearing masks and things like social distancing and cleaning? [27.03] - How they've found not being able to touch clients when coaching? [37.25] - Have they had any clients who have come in and then decided against it? [41.15] - How they've handled cleaning and sanitizing equipment? [47.50] - Training clients who have had COVID and how it's affected their recovery Find Out More About Laura & Will: Website Instagram Find Out More About LTB: Website Instagram Facebook
Marketing Monkey- Dein Podcast für Marketing & Business Development im Digital-Dschungel!
Als Marketingliebhaber mit Haut und Haar nervt mich die aktuelle Debatte gerade mächtig.
Im Kanton Zürich wird die Einbürgerung vereinheitlicht: Die Erklärung von Regierungsrätin Jacqueline Fehr; Migros und Dubler zoffen sich um Schokoküsse: Die Einschätzung eines Image-Experten; Die St.Galler sind im Kokainkonsum schweizweite Spitze: Die Stadträtin nimmt Stellung.
Im Kanton Zürich wird die Einbürgerung vereinheitlicht: Die Erklärung von Regierungsrätin Jacqueline Fehr; Migros und Dubler zoffen sich um Schokoküsse: Die Einschätzung eines Image-Experten; Die St.Galler sind im Kokainkonsum schweizweite Spitze: Die Stadträtin nimmt Stellung.
George Wright is the Co-Founder & CEO of Vochlea Music and he joins us LIVE from NAMM in Anaheim to the Brand New Dubler Studio Kit. It allows you to hum a synth pattern, beatbox to trigger a drumkit and much more..all in real time! Think of it like a MIDI Keyboard and MPC rolled … Continue reading EP158 George Wright: Dubler Studio Kit →
My son always reminds me that New Zealand is 8000 miles from Nashville. That number is etched in my head now but What could it MEAN? Surely being surrounded by that lush and splendid setting growing up must have a huge impact on ones sonic sense? I feel a ramble coming on! Yep we meander-chat about the wind, pavlova (important beef. Not beef Pav, the other kind of beef), the promise of 20% sax and the giddy power and cruelty of naivety in the world of Baynk. I had a good writing hang with him in LA sometime ago and was happy we found a sec to natter. I realized this chat is showing it's age now as we had this convo a year ago. I was curious how things might have matured and settled for Jock in this time. He has kept the releases very controlled and high quality. Well worth a listen! His “Someone's EP II” is superb and got a bunch of tasty remixes including one from Machine Drum, my guest on episode 40. Only a few days ago a new jam hit the webs, an instrumental mellow burn called “High” Please welcome to the show Baynk! _____________ Music for today's show comes from. Chris Nickolls who makes music under the name 'Kmodo' 'Cold Fusion' is his first release and features Berlin based singer Clara Hill And you can find his music on/in? The cloud! Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/komodo/sets/cold-fusion-ep/s-pfkY8 _____________ Nitty 60 sees me having a good ole sing into the rather superb DUBLER from UK company Vochlea Here's the link to their box of tricks: https://www.vochlea.co.uk
The Dubler Studio Kit lets you use your voice to control synths, drum machines and other MIDI gear Vochlea Music, a U.K. startup and alumni of Abbey Road Red, the music tech incubator from Abbey Road Studios, is launching a crowdfunding campaign today for “Dubler Studio Kit,” a new device and app that turns your voice into a MIDI controller for synths, drum machines, DAWs and other music gear.
What does it take to become a artistic legend? Sally speaks to Douglas Dubler: the fashion and fine art photography master, who established a name for himself in the 1960's with his insatiable thirst for perfection. Dubler takes inspiration from some of the greatest artists and photographers in history, including Leonardo Da Vinci, Ansel Adams, Irving Penn, and Isamu Noguchi, creating work that is timeless. Full of amazing stories with some of the most famous people in the world, he reveals to Sally his favourite person that he's ever photographed, what he learned from the icons and who he is out to photograph next!
Sermons and Bible Studies from CGI Burlington. Find out more, by visiting us at www.cgiburlington.org.
Sermons and Bible Studies from CGI Burlington. Find out more, by visiting us at www.cgiburlington.org.
Ben speaks to Brisbane decathlete Cedric Dubler about Rio preparations and riding a unicycle to school
In almost every prison movie you see, there is a group of fanatically religious inmates. They are almost always led by a charismatic leader, an outsized father-figure who is loved by his acolytes and feared by nearly everyone else. They're usually black Muslims, but you also see the occasional born-again Christian gang. They promise salvation and, of course, protection. And they are scary. But what's religious life in prison really like? In order to find out, the intrepid and brave religious scholar Joshua Dubler actually moved into a prison. He lived among the inmates and those clerics who had devoted their lives to bringing them spiritual comfort. The picture he paints in his wonderful new book Down in the Chapel: Religious Life in an American Prison (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013) is nothing like the one you see on TV or in the movies. In fact, it's so irreducibly complex that it almost defies description. The spirituality he finds behind bars is adapted to the harsh realities of prison life and the personalities of the religious (and quasi-religious) inmates themselves. Dubler reminds us that churches–of whatever type and wherever found–are made of people in all their idiosyncratic variety. Listen in to our fascinating and lively discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In almost every prison movie you see, there is a group of fanatically religious inmates. They are almost always led by a charismatic leader, an outsized father-figure who is loved by his acolytes and feared by nearly everyone else. They’re usually black Muslims, but you also see the occasional born-again Christian gang. They promise salvation and, of course, protection. And they are scary. But what’s religious life in prison really like? In order to find out, the intrepid and brave religious scholar Joshua Dubler actually moved into a prison. He lived among the inmates and those clerics who had devoted their lives to bringing them spiritual comfort. The picture he paints in his wonderful new book Down in the Chapel: Religious Life in an American Prison (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013) is nothing like the one you see on TV or in the movies. In fact, it’s so irreducibly complex that it almost defies description. The spirituality he finds behind bars is adapted to the harsh realities of prison life and the personalities of the religious (and quasi-religious) inmates themselves. Dubler reminds us that churches–of whatever type and wherever found–are made of people in all their idiosyncratic variety. Listen in to our fascinating and lively discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In almost every prison movie you see, there is a group of fanatically religious inmates. They are almost always led by a charismatic leader, an outsized father-figure who is loved by his acolytes and feared by nearly everyone else. They’re usually black Muslims, but you also see the occasional born-again Christian gang. They promise salvation and, of course, protection. And they are scary. But what’s religious life in prison really like? In order to find out, the intrepid and brave religious scholar Joshua Dubler actually moved into a prison. He lived among the inmates and those clerics who had devoted their lives to bringing them spiritual comfort. The picture he paints in his wonderful new book Down in the Chapel: Religious Life in an American Prison (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013) is nothing like the one you see on TV or in the movies. In fact, it’s so irreducibly complex that it almost defies description. The spirituality he finds behind bars is adapted to the harsh realities of prison life and the personalities of the religious (and quasi-religious) inmates themselves. Dubler reminds us that churches–of whatever type and wherever found–are made of people in all their idiosyncratic variety. Listen in to our fascinating and lively discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In almost every prison movie you see, there is a group of fanatically religious inmates. They are almost always led by a charismatic leader, an outsized father-figure who is loved by his acolytes and feared by nearly everyone else. They’re usually black Muslims, but you also see the occasional born-again Christian gang. They promise salvation and, of course, protection. And they are scary. But what’s religious life in prison really like? In order to find out, the intrepid and brave religious scholar Joshua Dubler actually moved into a prison. He lived among the inmates and those clerics who had devoted their lives to bringing them spiritual comfort. The picture he paints in his wonderful new book Down in the Chapel: Religious Life in an American Prison (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013) is nothing like the one you see on TV or in the movies. In fact, it’s so irreducibly complex that it almost defies description. The spirituality he finds behind bars is adapted to the harsh realities of prison life and the personalities of the religious (and quasi-religious) inmates themselves. Dubler reminds us that churches–of whatever type and wherever found–are made of people in all their idiosyncratic variety. Listen in to our fascinating and lively discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In almost every prison movie you see, there is a group of fanatically religious inmates. They are almost always led by a charismatic leader, an outsized father-figure who is loved by his acolytes and feared by nearly everyone else. They’re usually black Muslims, but you also see the occasional born-again Christian gang. They promise salvation and, of course, protection. And they are scary. But what’s religious life in prison really like? In order to find out, the intrepid and brave religious scholar Joshua Dubler actually moved into a prison. He lived among the inmates and those clerics who had devoted their lives to bringing them spiritual comfort. The picture he paints in his wonderful new book Down in the Chapel: Religious Life in an American Prison (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013) is nothing like the one you see on TV or in the movies. In fact, it’s so irreducibly complex that it almost defies description. The spirituality he finds behind bars is adapted to the harsh realities of prison life and the personalities of the religious (and quasi-religious) inmates themselves. Dubler reminds us that churches–of whatever type and wherever found–are made of people in all their idiosyncratic variety. Listen in to our fascinating and lively discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In almost every prison movie you see, there is a group of fanatically religious inmates. They are almost always led by a charismatic leader, an outsized father-figure who is loved by his acolytes and feared by nearly everyone else. They’re usually black Muslims, but you also see the occasional born-again Christian gang. They promise salvation and, of course, protection. And they are scary. But what’s religious life in prison really like? In order to find out, the intrepid and brave religious scholar Joshua Dubler actually moved into a prison. He lived among the inmates and those clerics who had devoted their lives to bringing them spiritual comfort. The picture he paints in his wonderful new book Down in the Chapel: Religious Life in an American Prison (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013) is nothing like the one you see on TV or in the movies. In fact, it’s so irreducibly complex that it almost defies description. The spirituality he finds behind bars is adapted to the harsh realities of prison life and the personalities of the religious (and quasi-religious) inmates themselves. Dubler reminds us that churches–of whatever type and wherever found–are made of people in all their idiosyncratic variety. Listen in to our fascinating and lively discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In almost every prison movie you see, there is a group of fanatically religious inmates. They are almost always led by a charismatic leader, an outsized father-figure who is loved by his acolytes and feared by nearly everyone else. They’re usually black Muslims, but you also see the occasional born-again Christian gang. They promise salvation and, of course, protection. And they are scary. But what’s religious life in prison really like? In order to find out, the intrepid and brave religious scholar Joshua Dubler actually moved into a prison. He lived among the inmates and those clerics who had devoted their lives to bringing them spiritual comfort. The picture he paints in his wonderful new book Down in the Chapel: Religious Life in an American Prison (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013) is nothing like the one you see on TV or in the movies. In fact, it’s so irreducibly complex that it almost defies description. The spirituality he finds behind bars is adapted to the harsh realities of prison life and the personalities of the religious (and quasi-religious) inmates themselves. Dubler reminds us that churches–of whatever type and wherever found–are made of people in all their idiosyncratic variety. Listen in to our fascinating and lively discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In almost every prison movie you see, there is a group of fanatically religious inmates. They are almost always led by a charismatic leader, an outsized father-figure who is loved by his acolytes and feared by nearly everyone else. They’re usually black Muslims, but you also see the occasional born-again Christian gang. They promise salvation and, of course, protection. And they are scary. But what’s religious life in prison really like? In order to find out, the intrepid and brave religious scholar Joshua Dubler actually moved into a prison. He lived among the inmates and those clerics who had devoted their lives to bringing them spiritual comfort. The picture he paints in his wonderful new book Down in the Chapel: Religious Life in an American Prison (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2013) is nothing like the one you see on TV or in the movies. In fact, it’s so irreducibly complex that it almost defies description. The spirituality he finds behind bars is adapted to the harsh realities of prison life and the personalities of the religious (and quasi-religious) inmates themselves. Dubler reminds us that churches–of whatever type and wherever found–are made of people in all their idiosyncratic variety. Listen in to our fascinating and lively discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices